The Janson Directive - By Robert Ludlum Page 0,94

adversary to asset. And having someone who understood the intricacies of international money laundering represented a very significant asset indeed. Moreover, Berman was clever in his manipulations: it would be difficult for the authorities to build a case against him. If he was likely to get off anyway, why not let him off with a debt on which Janson could collect?

There was something else, too. Janson had reviewed hundreds of pages of intercepts, had come to know the principals of the scheme. Many were cold-blooded, thuggish, menacing figures. Berman, for his part, deliberately insulated himself from the details; he was cheerfully amoral, but he wasn't unkind. He was perfectly happy to cheat people out of their funds but could be quite generous with his own. And somewhere along the line, Janson acquired a trace of sympathy for the high-living rogue.

"Paulie!" the bearlike man boomed, opening his arms wide. Janson stood and allowed himself to be enveloped in the Russian's embrace. Berman fit none of the stereotypes of a numbers man; he was all emotional effusion, mixing a passion for things with a passion for life.

"I hug you and I kiss you," Berman told Janson, pressing his lips to both his cheeks. Classic Berman: whatever the circumstances, he would display not the wariness of a man under pressure but the swagger of a larger-than-life bon vivant.

The fabric of Berman's pinstriped bespoke suit was a feltlike cashmere, and he smelled faintly of Geo. F. Trumpers extract of limes, the scent said to be favored by the Prince of Wales. In his caricatured way, Berman sought to be every inch the English gentleman, and there were many inches of him at that. His conversation was a cataract of Britishisms, malapropisms, and what Janson thought of as Bermanisms. As absurd as he was, though, Janson could not help feel a certain affection for him. There was even something winning about his contradictions, the way he managed to be at once devious and ingenuous - he always had an eye for the next scam, and he was always delighted to tell you about it.

"You're looking ... sleek and well fed, Grigori," Janson said.

Gregori patted his generous midriff. "Inside I'm wasting away. Come, we'll eat. Chop-chop." He squired Janson to the dining room, with an arm around his shoulder.

Inside, waiters in morning suits beamed and bobbed their heads as the ebullient Russian appeared, ushering him immediately to a table. Though tipping was prohibited by club rules, their bright-eyed attentiveness revealed that Berman had found a way to manifest his generosity.

"Their cold poached salmon - the best in the world," Berman said, settling into his cushioned seat. Berman said that a lot of things were the best in the world; he invariably spoke in superlatives. "But have lobster a la nage. Never fails. Also recommend roast grouse. Maybe both. You're too thin. Like Violetta in third act La Traviata. Must build you up."

He summoned a wine steward with a glance.

"That Puligny-Montrachet we had yesterday? Could we have bottle of that, Freddy?" He turned to Janson. "It's the greatest. You'll see."

"I have to say I'm surprised to find you here, ensconced at the heart of the British establishment."

"A rogue like me, you mean - how could they ever let me in?" Berman roared with laughter, his belly quivering through bespoke broadcloth. In a lower voice, he said, "It's a great story, actually. You see, about two years ago, I found myself invited to house party at Lord Sherwyn's, and ended up playing billiards with very nice gentleman I met there ... " Berman had made a habit of helping certain people out of trouble with timely loans, specializing in dissolute scions of venerable baronies. These were people who, Berman imagined, might have influence in the world. It was, in his book, sound investing.

"You'll have to tell me about it another time," Janson said blandly but pointedly. It was all he could do not to drum his fingers.

Berman was undeterred. "I suppose he had bit too much to drink, and he was winning big, big sums off me, and so I invited him to double up ... "

Janson nodded. The scenario was predictable. A more-than-pleasantly-buzzed British gentleman, winning outrageous sums from a seemingly sloppy-drunk Russian with seemingly infinite reserves of cash. The sozzled Russian who, all evening, had shown no sign that he knew one end of a cue stick from the other. The last game, when the British gentleman's substantial winnings were just about to become a true

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